“The suburban campus is far from dead in Atlanta. Some campuses are experiencing a revival, thanks to savvy owners adding urban attractions — restaurants and cafés — as well as services such as cleaning and catering.”

StreetsblogUSA – June 12, 2017
Transit shouldn’t just be for marginalized groups. Though it may be a long time before it’s seen as an essential public service for everyone in Burlington, NC, some are making exactly that argument.

Business Insider – May 13, 2017
Traditional malls need to transform themselves to stay alive, and many are making changes to attract more business by incorporating features like community gathering spaces, civic centers, event spaces, libraries, or micro-apartments.

Public Square – April 10, 2017
A CNU Legacy Project in the diverse Seattle suburb of Tukwila retrofits the streetscape, changes zoning codes, transit-oriented development, and embracing incremental growth in order to make Tukwila more pedestrian friendly and human-scaled.

The Economist – April 8, 2017
Not even the new Apple headquarters can avoid the minimum parking requirements– a detrimental and all too common practice that inhibits efforts to make public transit more accessible and cities more bikeable.

World Finance– April 7, 2017
The “Father of the Shopping Mall” Victor Gruen discusses his original intent behind the development of the shopping mall, how unsustainable suburban sprawl got it all wrong, and what malls can do to reverse their decline and avoid total closures.

The Charlotte Observer – March 27, 2017
Charlotte City Council is planning to vote on a new plan that will finally point the way to a solution to the problem of what to do with the long-vacant former Eastland Mall site.

Philadelphia Mag– March 4, 2017
One mall’s placemaking quest to turn malls ‘inside out’ and transform them into a cool, mixed-use downtown center despite pushback from residents in an attempt to attract millennials and new businesses.